Fastest Time To Recite Alphabet With Fist In Mouth

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Jordan Brown recited the alphabet with his fist in his mouth in 2.81
seconds.

DENIED: The attempt does not show enough evidence, please document in
a manner that clearly shows the full record attempt.

Stride’s setting 100 records in 100 days. At the end of 100 days, we’ll
verify if you are the standing Record Holder. If you are, you’ll get
$500 for each record you managed to hold with your guile, talent, and
sheer will.

General caution and common sense required. We show the Stride Team at
work, but recommend that these challenges be done at home.

- must fit first two knuckles of all fingers and first knuckle of thumb in mouth- must recite English alphabet from "A" to "Z"- must observe RecordSetter fast speech criteria- must provide video evidence

The dialogue about whether copying technique should be accepted is ridiculous. No one "owns" technique. For good reference on an individual whose form revolutionized his sport, see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Fosbury

very ture we all do the same records and because were doing them who ever is the first to do them should keep it and nobody else can do the record because they did it first and to do it again would be stealing

But, Jordan... you stole the technique. And that's technically like stealing in real life. That's the way the world works. You can't do that. You should be denied on principle here. Clearly it's against the rules to do something as quick as someone else using their same method.

Lmao. xD The and was great. And I disagree with the idea thing, cause if my unique strat was starting with the purple crayon or using my order of words for rhyming stride fastest, and no one should be able to use it, that would be silly.

yea its kuz ur knuckles. nd dude y did u bite my idear.......its all good though.....they should make a rule that if a person up[loads an attempt of something and its truely unique......other ppl shudnt b able to do it

Jordan (and others): we've been accepting attempts in which we clearly hear every letter pronounced. It's not easy defining a fine line, but our team has been listening extremely closely to each attempt, usually multiple times. We think Cody's current record follows the criteria and is clearly audible throughout.